There are three species of mangrove trees: red mangroves, white mangroves and black mangroves. They all live in salty or brackish waters along the Coastlines. Red mangrove are usually in the lower/deeper waters. They are the ones with the large prop-roots. Reds and Blacks live in higher edges of the wetland/shorelines.
Mangrove
Yes, mangrove trees do, and there are others as well.
A Mangrove are trees that grow on swamp like or any water environments. For short a mangrove ecosystem is the interaction between biotic and abiotic factors in a "mangrove forest"
1000 years
Mangrove leaves refer to the leaves of mangrove trees, which are uniquely adapted to thrive in saline or brackish water environments. These leaves are thick, waxy, and often have salt-excreting glands to remove excess salt. They also have specialized adaptations such as sunken stomata and salt-excluding tissues that help mangrove trees cope with high salt concentrations.
Bakawan is the Tagalog name for the mangrove. The mangrove is a tree with a root system that has adapted itself to live in salt water. Bakawan is found in tropical regions like Florida and the Philippines.
Yes. Cerebera Manghas is a mangrove. It can live in salt water.
salt water
yes
no they give birth to there young ones in a cave hanging upside down
Well, the mangrve forests, act as a water filter to other plants and animals. The mangroves trees live in swamps and other places where there is salt water and then turn it to fresh water, thus helping other organisms survive and live. That's why then you go to mangrove swamps, you will see a lot of plants and animals nearby.
The fish called Admiral Mangrove lives in trees. See the link below please: http://www.ntra-net.com/2009/03/15/fish-that-live-in-trees-for-several-months/